It's been widely reported and that makes it fact-esque. - Stephen Colbert

Like a Bullet "Strays" When It's Aimed at Your Head

The news media that David Sirota and Glenn Greenwald have caught pretending they had nothing to do with the Bush Propaganda Storm of 2001-03 are giving equally thoughtful passes to Elaine Chao's Labor Dept. The WaPo headline says "Labor Dept. Accused of Straying From Enforcement". "Straying"? Like they got pushed off course by the wind or something, nothing they could do about it?

As if.

That's not writer Michael Fletcher's descriptive term but it's a more-or-less accurate description of the sense of the people Fletcher has chosen to interview, who are all being pretty careful, though after the IG's report and the GAO report, one has to wonder why.

Senior CAP Fellow Scott Lilly thinks it just might be possible that there are "people embedded [in Chao's Labor Dept] who are philosophically hostile to the mission of the agency." No shit, Sherlock. And who "embedded" them? Wanda the Wonder Fairy? Or mayhap they all just crash-landed there in a multileague Vandorrian spacecraft and didn't know what else to do?

Chamber of Commerce VP Randall Johnson whines, " I think you are going to a shift from compliance assistance to pure enforcement." Gee, I wonder why? Couldn't be because there, like, hasn't been any enforcement for 8 years, now could it?

But in Michael's he said/she said, QuickTyme News reporting, one simply doesn't have time/money/space/place your own excuse here to explain or even mention such things. And in any case they are simply unexplainable, political phenomena that have no beginning and no end, no progenitor, and for which no one is or can be held responsible. It was, like, "Fate, Man".

And those damn "Labor activists".

Labor activists say that focusing so closely on the concerns of employers shortchanges workers and that a shift in emphasis is long overdue. Under President Bush, they say, the pendulum has swung far away from enforcement, leaving workers vulnerable to dangerous workplaces and with little protection from exploitive employers.

In July, the Government Accountability Office issued a report alleging that the Labor Department did an inadequate job of investigating complaints by low-wage workers who alleged that their employers were stiffing them for overtime, or failing to pay the minimum wage. That report followed another that found troubling inconsistencies in how the department handled individual worker complaints. Department officials have disputed both reports, calling them inaccurate.

Imagine that. In spite of the fact that it was those damn activists making all that noise (oh, and the GAO), Obama listened anyway and made an actual phone call. Fletcher is bemused. What will this strange creature do next? Make it illegal to work somebody for 40 hrs but only pay him for 20? How will American business cope with such Draconian rules?

*sigh* Cluelessness continues at the WaPo. Let's face it, the press didn't follow or do much of a job on any story anytime during the "War Years" except what the Buish Admin told them to do. Labor was absolutely one of their least favorite beats to cover and for years finding out what Elaine was up to meant reading the foreign press because the US press couldn't have cared less.

Neither the information in the IG report that showed how few prosecutions had been carried out on businesses compared to other presidencies (and it sure wasn't because Corporate America was nicer to its workers) nor the stats in the GAO report that sliced her up for falsifying data so it would look better for Bush and his policies, were first reported by any American news media though both have been glaringly apparent for several years. I have complained consistently here and on the other blogs over most of Chao's tenure that the Labor Dept stats, for example, consistently were suspiciously Bush-friendly, and soon I was reporting - weeks or months after they'd first been announced - that they had been "adjusted" and were (now that no one was paying any attention) nowhere near as healthy-looking as Chao's first version. So I, a non-trained, unpaid, amateur could see something that got right past highly-trained, highly-paid professional "journalists"?

I'm a smart guy but it really didn't take much but the one thing the US media lacked: either the willingness or the simple guts to ask questions, to doubt the Great God Bush. They have been nothing short of pathetic and they apparently mean to continue in the same vein.

Comments

It never hurts to remember that newspapers built up their incredible profit margins by being the original beneficiaries of the independent contractor scam. Newspaper carriers are now increasingly outsourced so as to protect newspapers from the inevitable day when a judge rules that carriers are in every obvious sense employees, and not indy contractors.

The OC Register just settled for $22 million with their carriers, but only after the carriers agreed not to contest their employment status as indy contractors.

CMike: You're right about the Sirota post. Not sure how that happened but it has been corrected.

As for the Swarm, which years would you prefer? I picked those because they seemed to me the nadir, the time during which the American press never but NEVER questioned Bush about anything. That's not to say such despicable behaviour didn't go on longer than that, only that afterwards there were sometimes holes where an actual journalist occasionally reported actual news rather than war propaganda and got away with it. But I'm certainly willing to open the time frame.

Mark: Corporations are corporations and they'll get away with whatever they can. It doesn't do to forget that, especially since they threw away any pretense of professionalism 25 years ago when they, with standard corporate cowardice, responded to the right-wing letter campaign and stopped "picking on" Reagan. If they aren't professional journalists any more - and they aren't - then they're nothing but what Roger Ailes et all have said they were all along: a business out to make money. Period.

Bang for the Buck: Boosting the American Economy

Compassionate Conservatism in Action

Molly

"We are the deciders. And every single day, every single one of us needs to step outside and take some action to help stop this war."

Zinn

"[O]ur time, our energy, should be spent in educating, agitating, organizing our fellow citizens in the workplace, in the neighborhood, in the schools. Our objective should be to build, painstakingly, patiently but energetically, a movement that, when it reaches a certain critical mass, would shake whoever is in the White House, in Congress, into changing national policy on matters of war and social justice."

Bono

"True religion will not let us fall asleep in the comfort of our freedom. Love thy neighbor is not a piece of advice, it's a command. ...

God, my friends, is with the poor and God is with us, if we are with them. This is not a burden, this is an adventure."

The Reverend Al Sharpton

Ray wasn't singing about what he knew, 'cause Ray had been blind since he was a child. He hadn't seen many purple mountains. He hadn't seen many fruited plains. He was singing about what he believed to be.

Mr. President, we love America, not because of all of us have seen the beauty all the time.

But we believed if we kept on working, if we kept on marching, if we kept on voting, if we kept on believing, we would make America beautiful for everybody.

Marx

''With adequate profit, capital is very bold. A certain 10 percent will ensure its employment anywhere; 20 percent will produce eagerness, 50 percent positive audacity; 100 percent will make it ready to trample on all human laws; 300 percent, and there is not a crime which it will not scruple, nor a risk it will not run, even to the chance of its owner being hanged.''